Wednesday, 14 March 2012

Alpaca Fiber Glossary



Absorbency
The propensity of a material to take in and retain liquid, usually water.


Acid dye
A dye which is applied to fabric or fiber from an acid dye solutions. It can be used on nylon, wool and other animal protein fibers, silk, acrylic, polypropylene and blends of the above. It is reasonably colorfast to light and laundering.

Animal fibers
Protein hair, fur, and cocoon materials taken from animals for the purposes of weaving, knitting or felting into a fabric. Typical animal fibers include, wool, mohair, llama, alpaca, cashmere, camel and vicuna and cocoon material (silk).

Bale
A bag, sack, square or oblong package into which fiber is compressed. The size and weight of a bale is variable.

Batt or Batting
Sheets or rolls of carded cotton or wool or other fiber or mixtures thereof which is used for stuffing, padding, quilting, felting and spinning.

Beater
A toothed or spiked roll in an opening or cleaning machine used for processing fiber into yarn.

Blend
A textile containing two or more different fibers, variants of the same fiber or different colors and grades of the same fiber.

Blending
The mixing of quantities of the same fiber taken from many lots or of different types of fiber to produce a uniform result.

Blowout factor
The rapidity with which an animal's fiber diameter increases (thickens) with age.

Bradford System
One of the three principal methods of spinning worsted yarn in which longer fibers are utilized to produce very compact and sleek yarns.

Breaking Length
A measure of the breaking strength of a yarn. It is the calculated length of yarn which equals its breaking load and is equal to the tensile stress at rupture of the yarn.

Breaking Load
The maximum stress needed to rupture a fiber, yarn or fabric in a tension test.

Brushing
A finishing process for knit or woven fabrics in which brushes or other abrading elements are used to raise a nap.

Card or Carder
A textile machine or hand implement that separates fibers, removes some vegetation and spreads the fibers into a web for subsequent operations that culminate in spinning. The hand implement has iron teeth or wires and is used in pairs. It can be used to raise the nap on a fabric.

Carding
A preliminary process in manufacturing spun yarn in which the fibers are separated, distributed, equalized and formed into a web. The web can be very thin or thick. The process of carding removes some impurities, and a certain amount of short or broken fibers.


Comber
A machine used for the combing process in manufacturing.

Combing
A step that is subsequent to carding in worsted spinning which separates the long, choice desirable fibers from the neps and shorter stock (noils), removes almost all foreign matter and arranges fibers in parallel order forming a sliver. Combed yarns are finer, cleaner, more lustrous and stronger than carded yarns.

Core Spinning
A yarn spinning process by which a filament (usually elastic under tension) is covered with a sheath of staple fibers to produce a stretchable yarn. The resultant yarn and fabric have the characteristics of the sheath fiber along with the advantage of stretch and recovery.

Consistency
The uniform distribution of all the fiber characteristics within each lock and throughout the entire fleece.

Core Sampling
The gathering of specimens of fiber for testing from bales or packs by inserting a hollow tube into each package.

Core Yarn
A yarn made by winding one yarn around another to give the appearance of a yarn made solely of the outer yarn.

Cortical Cells
The spindle shaped cells forming the inside structure of a fiber.

Cotting
Fiber naturally felted on animal.

Crease Recovery

The ability of a creased or wrinkled fabric to recover its original shape over time.

Crease Retention
The ability of a fabric to retain a pleat or a fold which has been made deliberately.

Crimp
An organized or uniform waviness in an individual lock of fiber.

Crimp Recovery
The ability of a yarn or fiber to return to its original crimped state after being released from a tensile force.

Crinkle
The waviness of each individual fiber when separated from a lock. It is responsible for elasticity and is usually irregular.

Cuticle
The outer layer of cells of a fiber which are hard, flattened and do not fit together evenly and whose tips point away from the fiber shaft forming serrated edges. These serrated edges cause the fibers to grip together during processing and manufacturing.See also Scales

Debris
Material that can be found contaminating a fleece.

Density
The number of hair follicles per square inch of skin.

Direction of twist (S twist or Z twist)
To determine twist, hold yarn in a vertical position and examine the angle of the spiral. The angle of the S twist will correspond to the center portion of the S. The angle of the Z twist will correspond to the center portion of the Z. When spinning, the wheel should rotate counter clockwise for an S twist and rotate clockwise for a Z twist. In South America, yarn that is spun with Z twist is believed to be magic.

Drafting
The process of drawing out a strand of material by pulling it apart. Commercially, this is done between rollers and in handspinning it is done with the hands.

Dye
A colorant that becomes molecularly dispersed at some point during application to fiber and exhibits some degree of permanence. There are many application classes of dyes, including acid dyes, disperse dyes, reactive dyes, and natural dyes. Dyes may be generally divided into natural and synthetic types. Natural dyes are obtained from berries, flowers, roots, bark and more. Synthetic dyes are chemical compounds.

Dyeability
The capacity of fibers to accept dyes.

Dyebath
The solution (usually water) containing the dyes, dyeing assistants and any other ingredients necessary for dyeing.

Dyeing
The process of applying a comparatively permanent color to fiber, yarn or fabric by immersing in a bath of dye.

Exhaustion
The amount of dye taken from the dyebath by the fiber, yarn or fabric being dyed.

Fast Color
A dye which is stable to color destroying agents, such as sunlight, perspiration, washing, abrasion, and wet and dry pressing.

Felt
An ancient technique that produces a non woven sheet of matted material which is most frequently made from wool, hair or fur created by the entanglement of a mass of fibers that takes place when heat, moisture and pressure are combined.

Feltability
The degree to which fibers will consolidate by felting.

Felting Property
The property of wool and some other fibers to interlock with each other to create felt. Felting is caused by the directional friction effect of scales on the fiber surfaces. The factors involved in felting are the fiber structure, the crimp of the fibers, the ease of deformation of the fiber and the fiber's power of recovery from deformation.

Fiber
A unit of matter characterised by having a length at least 100 times its diameter or width. The fundamental component used in making textile yarns and fabrics.


Fiber Fineness
The mean fiber diameter which is usually expresses in microns.

Fleece
The entire coat sheared from an animal at one time.

Follicle
The skin structure from which hair or wool fiber grows.

Fulling
A finishing process in which the woven or knitted cloth is subjected to moisture, heat and friction causing it to shrink considerably in both directions and become compact and solid. In heavily fulled fabrics both the weave and the yarn are obscured, thus giving the apprearance of felt.

Fulling Agent
A chemical, usually a surfactant, that acts as a lubricant during the process of fulling.

Grading
The classification of fibers according to such properties as staple length, strength, evenness and fineness. The sorting of fiber.

Guard Hair
The long, stiff, usually coarse fiber which projects from the wooly undercoat of a mammal's pelt.

Hair Fiber
A specialty fiber obtained from an animal other than a sheep. It is usually from the goat and camel families (mohair, cashmere, angora, llama, alpaca, vicuna and guanaco). These products, except angora, may be included in the term wool according to the Wool Products Labeling Act of 1939.

Hand or Handle
The tactile feel of fiber related to the combination of all the fiber characteristics.

Handspun
Yarns which are spun by hand using a spinning wheel or electric spinner.

Hank
A definite length of textile material that varies according to the material. A hank of wool is 560 yards, cotton and silk is 840 yards and linen is 300 yards.

Identification Test
Any procedure for determining kinds of fibers, yarn construction, fabric construction, or finish and coloring of textiles. Physical, chemical, microscopic and other methods may be used.

Impurity
Any undesirable extraneous material present in a fleece or textile product.

Kemp
A short, coarse wool or hair fiber with a large (>60% of fiber diameter) unevenly developed medulla that causes uneven dyeing.

Keratin
A protein substance which is the chief component of wool fiber.

Knitting
A method of constructing fabric by interlocking a series of loops of one or more yarns.

Loom
A device or machine for weaving cloth.

Luster
The light reflective quality of fiber exhibited in shine and gloss.

Matting
the inextricable meshing of fibers in the fleece.

 Mean Fiber Diameter
The average diameter (thickness) of a group of fibers from an animal.

Medulla
The hollow, rounded cells which are found along the center of the main axis of a fiber. They may run continuously along the length of the fiber.

Medulated Fiber
A true hair fiber which does not have the same spinning and dyeing properties as wool, alpaca and llama. Medullated fibers are kemp, found in on the faces, head and legs of sheep and guard hair which is grown by goats and some alpacas and llamas.

Micron
A unit of measurement used in assessing the diameter of a fiber which equals 1/25,000 of an inch.

Natural Dye
Dye obtained from substances such as roots, bark, wood, berries, lichens, insects, shellfish and flowers.

Natural Fiber
Fiber obtained from animal, vegetable or mineral sources, as opposed to those regenerated or synthesized from chemicals.

Nep
A small knot of tangled fibers, usually consisting of short , dead or immature fiber.

Noil
Short fibers removed during the combing process of yarn making.

Picker
A piece of equipment that opens fiber and removes foreign matter.

Picking
The process of opening fiber and/or removing foreign matter.

Pin-drafting
A system of drafting in which the fibers are oriented relative to one another in the sliver and are controlled by rolls of pins between the drafting rolls. It is primarily used for long fibers in the semi-worsted and worsted spinning systems.

Ply
To twist together two or more single yarns to form another yarn or cord. One of any number of single yarns twisted together to form a yarn.

Production Sequence
shearing, sorting, opening, cleaning, carding, drawing, possibly combing, possibly roving, twisting or spinning

Protein Fiber
A fiber composed of protein, including such naturally occurring animal fibers as wool, silk, alpaca, llama and other hair and fur fibers.

Rejects
Fiber which is unacceptable because of poor color, tenderness, seeds, burrs, kempiness, stains, lumps and tufts.

Resilience
The power of recovery to original shape and size after removal of the strain which caused the deformation. A fiber may possess this quality to spring back to its original state after being crushed or wrinkled. Resilience is sometimes referred to as memory.

Roving
A loose assemblage of fibers drawn or rubbed into a single strand, usually thicker than a sliver.

Sample
A small portion of a larger amount of material which is taken for testing.

Scales
Also known as cuticle. The outer layer of cells of mammal hair fiber which are hard, flattened, do not fit together evenly and whose surfaces overlap and enclose the cortex. The size and shape vary from species to species and are important characteristics used in fiber identification. The exposed edges of scales point towards the tips of animal fibers and give rise to the friction effect and felting.

Scouring
Cleaning raw wool or fiber and removing such impurities as dirt, sweat, and grease by washing with soaps and alkalies or with chemicals.

Second Cut
The short pieces in a fleece caused by careless shearing. Second cuts are caused by re-shearing areas not sheared to the skin. This diminishes the value of a fleece.

Semi-worsted Spinning System
Spinning similar to the worsted spinning system in which the combing process is eliminated.

Semi-worsted Yarn
Yarn spun from sliver carded (not combed) and pin-drafted on worsted spinning system machines.

Shearing
Cutting the fleece from an animal with electric or hand shears.

Shrinkage
A reduction in length or width of a material caused by certain treatments, especially washing. A loss of weight and volume of wool due to scouring when grease, sweat, and foreign matter are removed.

Skirting
Removing the stained, unusable, or undesirable portions of a fleece.

Sorting
Separating a fleece or fiber into groups of comparable character and quality. The grading of fiber.

Spinning
The final step in the production of yarn. The twisting of the the sliver or roving. The entire process of making yarn from fiber.

Standard Deviation (SD)
The amount of variation from the mean (average) within a single data set. The greater the standard deviation, the greater the range (difference between the highest and lowest values) of values within the sample.

Staple
A synonym for fiber. A lock or tuft of wool.

Staple Length
The length of sheared locks obtained by measuring the natural staple without stretching or disturbing the crimp. The fiber regrowth or regeneration from one shearing to the next.

S-twist
see direction of twist

Style
The combination of crimp and crinkle ranging from good crimp and good crinkle to no crimp and no crinkle.

Synthetic Dye
A complex colorant derived from coal tar.

Tags
Broken or dung-covered wool and other wastes that are swept from the floor of shearing areas.

Tender Wool
A wool staple with weak places in the fibers. It can only be used for carding rather than combing. It is caused by illness, excessive exposure to weather, or poor nutrition.

Tensile Strength
The amount of pulling a fiber can withstand before it stretches and breaks.

Textile
A broad classification of materials that can be utilized in constructing fabrics and the fabrics made with those materials.

Texture
The surface effect of cloth or fiber as dull, lustrous, wooly, stiff, soft, fine, coarse, open or closely woven. Also known as hand or feel.

Tippy Wool
The badly weathered ends of fleece, usually contain a considerable amount of grease, dirt and other debris. The tips dye differently from the rest of the fleece.

Top
A strand of longer fibers that have been straightened, made parallel and separated from the shorter fibers by combing.

Top Sample
A sample of top.

Total Fleece Weight
The weight of the entire raw fleece.

Twist
The number of turns about its axis per unit of length observed in a yarn or other textile strand. It is usually indicated as turns per inch or tpi.

Virgin Fiber
According to the Federal Trade Commission, wool which has not been processed in any way, shape or form. Hair and other specialty fibers are classed as wool as measured by the Federal Trade Commission. This term is a misnomer when used in advertising or on labels.

Weaving
Making cloth by interlacing yarns at right angles according to a predetermined pattern.

Wool
Traditionally, the fibers covering the skin of a sheep. According to the Wool Products Labeling Act of 1939, the term includes the fleece of a sheep, angora goat, undercoat of a cashmere goat, and specialty fibers of alpaca, llama, vicuna, and guanaco. The undercoat of mammals other than the sheep, goat or camel families are referred to as fur.

Woolen
Describes yarn made using the woolen spinning system.

Woolen Spinning System
In this system, fiber is carded two or three times but not combed and goes directly from cards to the spinning process. Generally wool used for this system are shorter, have more crimp and better felting qualities. With this system it is possible to use wools of different types, lengths and character together in blends.

Worsted
A yarn that has been made using the worsted spinning system.

Worsted Spinning System
A system of yarn production designed for medium or longer wools, and other fibers. The suitable fiber lengths vary from 2.5 to 7 inches. The process includes, opening, blending, cleaning, carding, followed by combing, drawing and spinning. These yarns are compact, smooth and more even and stronger than similar yarns spun using the woolen system.

Yarn
A continuous strand of textile fibers that may be composed of endless filaments or shorter fibers twisted or otherwise held together. Yarns are utilized in making fabric.

Yield
The quantity of clean wool obtained from a specified amount of grease wool. The amount of usable fiber after the processes of washing, drying, and removing guard hairs.

Yolk
A colorless natural impurity consisting of grease and sweat.

Z-twist
See direction of twist

Alpaca Facts & Information


Countries of Origin 
From South America where they graze at an altitude of 3 - 4000 metres on the Andes Mountains Altiplano, which runs through Peru, Chile, Bolivia and Argentina.

Population
Approximately three million worldwide, with over 90 percent still living in South America. Approximately 90 percent of all alpacas are huacaya and ten percent are suri.

Size 
Alpacas are small gentle animals. They stand about 0.9 metres at the withers and about 1.5 metres at the head and weigh from 45 to 80 kilograms. Crias normally weigh 6 to 8 kg at birth.

Lifespan 
15 to 20 years, with some living to 25 years of age.

Reproductive lifespan of female 
From approximately 2 to17 years.

Reproductive lifespan of herdsire 
From approximately 3 to16 years.

Gestation period
11 to 12 months. Healthy females can produce cria approximately once each year. Twins are extremely rare.

Annual Growth rate of fleece
80 to 150 mm.

Weight of fleece
A junior (first fleece) is often about 1.5kg. Some mature individuals can yield up to 8kg.

Physical Characteristics
Huacaya fiber is short, dense, crimpy and gives a woolly appearance
Suri fiber is silky and resembles pencil-like locks
Short and low set tail
Have soft padded feet with two toes
Do not have horns, hooves or claws, incisors, or upper teeth
Eat grass and chew cud
Weight between 150 and 200 lbs.
Average height is 36 inches at the withers
Have three stomachs
Adaptable to any climate

History
Members of the Camelid family (Vicuna, Guanco, Llama and Alpaca)
Native to Andean Mountain range of South America
Primarily found in Peru, Bolivia, and Chile
Provided clothing and transportation to the Incas
First imported in the United States in 1984
Domesticated for over 5,000 years
Current figures note about 50,000 registered alpacas in the U.S.

Reproduction
Average lifespan of an alpaca is about 20 years
Gestation is 11.5 months.
Female alpaca normally gives birth, without assistance, in the daylight hours
Baby alpacas are called crias
Have single births.

Behavior
Alert, intelligent, curious, and predictable
Social animals that seek companionship
Communicate by softly humming
Also communicate with neck posturing, ear and tail positioning and head tilt
Deposit their odorless bean-like pellets in concentrated areas

Care
Sheared without harm every 12 to 18 months
Require minimal fencing. They can be pastured at 5-10 per acre
Virtually disease-resistant animals
Require annual vaccinations with tetanus and other locally appropriate vaccines
Need routine parasite control
Need occasional nail and/or teeth trimming

End Products
Main end-product is fiber
Alpaca Fiber
• is unusually strong and resilient. The strength is not diminished as it becomes finer, making it an ideal material for garments of all kinds.
• can be lower than 16 microns, human hair is often 100 microns, and sheep wool commonly 30 to 60 microns (superfine sheep wool is about 16 microns).
• has more thermal capacity than that of almost any other animal. The fiber is made up of scales which contain microscopic air pockets which give it high insulation value.
• more lustrous with miniscule amounts of lanolin so it is not greasy and can be shorn and spun the same day.
• is soft, smooth and supple to the touch. The structure of the fiber produces a soft handle, or feel, with very little ‘prickle’ - softer and lighter than cotton balls to touch.
• has outer scales which are hard, flat cells which do not fit together evenly. The edges of these cells point away from the shaft of the fiber giving the fiber a serrated edge and allowing the fibers to grip together to form a strong and resilient yarn.
Softness is determined by scale height and frequency.
• found in twenty two basic colors and is the only pure black natural fiber. From white to jet black with browns, reds, greys and fawns found in between. Colours can range from brilliant white to the deepest black with all shades of grays including rare rose gray, to browns, fawns, and reds.
The eight basic colors are white, fawn, caramel (light brown), black, gray, brown (coffee), red, and piebald (colored blanket on a white body).
There are also many types of shading which do not fall into the twenty two basic colors identified by the international textile industry.

Friday, 9 March 2012

The Alpaca Lifestyle

Alpacas are a lifestyle choice with benefits and opportunities for the whole family. As more and more people are discovering, raising alpacas can add a dimension to family life that many find to be just what they have been looking for in terms of relaxation, fun, and a potential source of income. Raising alpacas is a lifestyle and investment available to many, from the empty-nester to a family with children to the professional looking for an outlet to daily stress. While the individuals and families who have decided to experience the alpaca adventure are widely diverse in their backgrounds, they share a common love for animals and a desire to remove stress from their lives. Alpacas meet the qualifications for such a lifestyle effortlessly. Families with children will appreciate how alpacas are so gentle and easy to handle, and they may want to become involved in the many family-oriented events around the country. Fairs, auctions, shows, and on-the-farm activities are just some of the events in which to participate.

The highly prized fleece of the alpaca has inspired many to start in-home "cottage industries" which involve shearing the alpacas and spinning the fiber of their own animals into yarn that can be made into high quality apparel while others market the fiber through the support of organized fiber co-ops.
Alpacas require a small amount of acreage compared to other livestock; the average farm is less than 10 acres. They eat pasture grasses and hay. A small three-sided barn or shelter is adequate for a small herd. The size of the herd is up to the individual's personal goals. The fact that alpacas are "easy keepers" makes them an attractive alternative investment. Owners still living in the city or suburbs can board their animals at many established alpaca farms, building their herds with an eye to the future when they can become more hands-on by raising their alpacas themselves.
Alpaca breeders from all walks of life interact with each other by participating in shows and open houses, co-owning animals, and by sharing their acquired expertise. This mutual interest and support has been the start of many lifelong friendships. The pleasure of owning the beautiful and gentle alpaca is a reward in itself. The prospect of enjoying shared family activities with this very huggable animal while reaping the financial rewards of owning and breeding alpacas increases the pleasure many times over.
Raising alpacas is a labor of love. The escape from a fast-paced urban lifestyle to the quiet, pastoral surroundings of raising and breeding alpacas is a prescription for healthier, less stressful living.

Thursday, 8 March 2012